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Initial Attributions and Information Seeking by Superiors and Subordinates in Production Variance Investigations.

Paul Harrison1; Stephen G. West2; J. Hal Reneau3

1 Assistant Professor, Kansas State University 1 · 2 Professor, Arizona State University 2 · 3 Associate Professor, Arizona State University 3

The Accounting Review 1988

Abstract Behavioral aspects of production variance investigations have been the focus of several recent articles. This research reports on a field experiment designed to obtain empirical evidence concerning the initial attributions made by a superior and a subordinate upon the occurrence of an unfavorable variance, as well as the processes they utilize when testing their initial attributional hypotheses. Evidence indicated that superiors made initial attributions that were internal relative to the subordinates, and also tended to seek additional information which was internal relative to the subordinates. This observed confirmatory hypothesis testing procedure is consistent with other research in non-accounting related settings. Implications for the design of accounting information systems are briefly discussed.

DOI
10.2308/tar-4481842
Volume
63 (2)
Pages
307-320
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
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